millerm277
Active member
How steep is White Lightning at Sno/Montage?
I did the math in some other slope/pitch thread, go look for it. (I'm not going to :smile
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How steep is White Lightning at Sno/Montage?
I did the math in some other slope/pitch thread, go look for it. (I'm not going to :smile. If I remember, it is up there in the range of "real" steep trails of New England. Of course, it's 350 vertical feet, but when it's bumped up as they've been letting it get lately, it'd qualify for this list I think.
I know that on Challenge and Razors at Blue and anything at Camelback..I can just straight run without a care in the world..due to an actual intermediate pitch except on 7 second "headwalls" which provide a boost of speed for the intermediate pitch below..but White Lightning is a different animal..it's as steep as some of the pitches at places like Hunter and in Vermont..but..there is no runout..the bottom is the lift..essentially..A steep run with no runout and just trees at the bottom..makes it alot tougher when there is a nice long runout/homestretch...I know Ski9 hit 70mph or so on his GPS on White Lightning..the icy Pocono snow..can make for fast descents..but only ski that way if you know you have the run clear..
I would say Switchback at Blue skiing it the way the trail is intended with big Super-G turns really whoring the whole trail..is a really exciting run. The midd section is wide from where they used to host downhills and you can take a right down the falline..line to get mad steezy speed going into the bottom..but check your speed going into the shuttle due to Red Coats..Switchback at Blue is a Saturday morning Blue Crue favorite..and where some of the best skiing can be found....don't tell anybody but Switchback is good..lol..
on the backside of a steep mogul. That said, it IS very impressive from the bottom. Too bad the steep section is all of 150 yds long or it would be a classic right up there with FIS at Sugarbush.
Interesting info--thanks, everyone. I didn't give the area much of a shot when I lived there for a few years. Went to Whitetail for night skiing after a weekend storm one time, but that's it. There's a chance we may end up moving back that way, so I'm curious how bad it would be skiing-wise.
I know that on Challenge and Razors at Blue and anything at Camelback..I can just straight run without a care in the world..due to an actual intermediate pitch except on 7 second "headwalls" which provide a boost of speed for the intermediate pitch below..but White Lightning is a different animal..it's as steep as some of the pitches at places like Hunter and in Vermont..but..there is no runout..the bottom is the lift..essentially..A steep run with no runout and just trees at the bottom..makes it alot tougher when there is a nice long runout/homestretch...I know Ski9 hit 70mph or so on his GPS on White Lightning..the icy Pocono snow..can make for fast descents..but only ski that way if you know you have the run clear..
I would say Switchback at Blue skiing it the way the trail is intended with big Super-G turns really whoring the whole trail..is a really exciting run. The midd section is wide from where they used to host downhills and you can take a right down the falline..line to get mad steezy speed going into the bottom..but check your speed going into the shuttle due to Red Coats..Switchback at Blue is a Saturday morning Blue Crue favorite..and where some of the best skiing can be found....don't tell anybody but Switchback is good..lol..
Depends where your coming from I guess. I have a number of hills within 30 minutes, a few of them decent, so for me it's not bad. If your coming from ski country out west you'll likely have a diffferent opinion.
Most of my ski life has been out west, but my current basis of comparison is living in New York. I know that NNE would be several hours further away, so I'm most curious about how the closer options compare: PA vs. Catskills.
Oh, and I already know that Blue is "mad steezy, yo." ;-)